Kuwait Times

Famine stalks war-torn Sudan during Ramadan

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Sudan this week entered its second straight Ramadan in the throes of a deadly war that has left much of the country gripped by the specter of famine.

“Ramadan? We’ve been doing that for months!” said Khartoum resident Othman Idriss, referring to the daytime fast observed by the faithful during the Muslim holy month.

“We have been eating one meal a day for months and we no longer even have the means to prepare it ourselves,” he told AFP in a phone call. “They serve it to us in a soup kitchen organized in a mosque.”

Before the war erupted on April 15, towards the end of last year’s Ramadan, Idriss ran a small food store. But since the fighting between rival generals turned the capital’s streets into a bloody war zone, he has been unable to return to the shop or the neighborho­od of the capital where it once stood.

The nearly 11-month war, which pits the regular army of General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan against the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, has killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and reduced much of the country’s infrastruc­ture to rubble.

In North Kordofan state, where the RSF holds sway, Mohammed Soleiman insists on keeping his shop in the city of Al-Rahad open even though customers are few and far between. The paramilita­ries “charge taxes on all the trucks, so the prices go up and there are fewer and fewer products arriving,” Soleiman told AFP.

Until recently, Imad Mohammed was able to use a banking app to receive cash transfers from relatives abroad to help feed his family. Despite a currency in freefall and triple-digit inflation even before the war broke out, the app had served as a lifeline to thousands, allowing them to make transfers and purchases and to receive cash.

But weeks ago, even that last financial safety net was lost, when telecommun­ications were suddenly cut in several states and cities. “For 11 months, I have received no salary,” said Mohammed, a teacher from Wad Madani, south of Khartoum.

Like all public employees in the battle zones, Mohammed has been left with next to no income. Some staff have sporadical­ly received parts of their wages, while others have had nothing at all. “We’re beginning Ramadan and we are already hungry,” he said.

The United Nations estimates that 18 million of Sudan’s 48 million people are acutely food insecure, five million of whom have reached the last level before famine. Less than five percent of Sudanese “can afford a full meal”, said the World Food Program, which fears “the largest famine crisis in the world”. — AFP

 ?? ?? GEDAREF: Muslim devotees wait to break their fast at a courtyard during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in Gedaref on March 12, 2024. — AFP
GEDAREF: Muslim devotees wait to break their fast at a courtyard during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in Gedaref on March 12, 2024. — AFP

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